Companies
in sentence
7472 examples of Companies in a sentence
The good news is we identified a hundred
companies
two years ago.
In the last 18 months, we've signed agreements with 40 of those hundred
companies
to begin to work with them on their supply chain.
Now what we're doing is bringing the CEOs of these 80
companies
together to help twist the arms of the final 20, to bring them to the table, because they don't like NGOs, they've never worked with NGOs, they're concerned about this, they're concerned about that, but we all need to be in this together.
These
companies
have begun to think differently.
The oil
companies
are ripping me off.
It explains why Hoover found it very difficult to persuade the world that it was more than vacuum cleaners, and why
companies
like Unilever and P&G keep brands separate, like Ariel and Pringles and Dove rather than having one giant parent brand.
So there's a group of
companies
that have been chipping away at this problem over the last 10 years, and this group of
companies
have recognized the reality that there's a great big nuclear reactor up there in the sky, and that Africa is more endowed with that solar power that comes from the sky, the sun, than almost any other continent.
So Susan does something that many customers of these
companies
that I talked about do, and she forces us to innovate.
She challenges companies, saying, "I've got the radio and the lights.
So there's a generation of these
companies
that are out there doing this work and creating thousands of jobs, creating, selling, tens of thousands of these solar systems, so bringing tens of thousands of families into light, and tackling that big $1 billion problem that I talked about at the beginning, and really innovating.
And what they're doing is, they're not only energy companies, they're also credit finance companies, so they're bringing people into an economy.
They're retail companies, so they're taking products out to people in the connecting markets.
And they're appliance companies, so they're developing extraordinary products that are very efficient and very cheap.
And that's an extraordinary thing that's happening, and if you listen to Susan and Francis, you get to this point where you say, "These guys have this extraordinary sense of dignity about the way they're achieving their power, the sense of ownership and the sense of pride, and I'm going to flip into a little tiny video clip, which is from a distributor of one of these
companies
that I'm talking about.
CA: And some of the
companies
themselves, I mean, there's plenty of demand there.
And that's holding a lot of these
companies
back.
And meanwhile,
companies
are adding to this list.
In the brewing process, there's lots of cloudy elements in the beer, so to get rid of these cloudy elements, what some
companies
do is they pour the beer through a sort of gelatin sieve in order to get rid of that cloudiness.
Now a couple of
companies
like Google have innovation time off, 20 percent time.
So you have the
companies
also realizing that sick staff don't work, and dead customers don't buy.
CA: But is it mainly politicians who are going to have to get their act together, or is it going to be more just civil society and
companies?
TJ: It has to be
companies.
It's a lot like other consumer
companies.
Today, tech
companies
are the world's largest editors.
What if we redesign our health care system into one that does not reimburse practitioners for the actual procedures performed on a patient but rather reimburses doctors, hospitals, pharmaceutical and medical
companies
for every day a single individual is kept healthy and doesn't develop a disease?
It needs doctors, hospitals, insurers, pharmaceutical and medical
companies
to reframe their approach and, most important, it can't happen without the willingness and motivation of individuals to change their lifestyle in a sustained way, to prioritize staying healthy, in addition to opening up for sharing the health data on a constant basis.
It will take several more years to get to mass adoption, but we are at the edge of commercialization, meaning there are several
companies
out there with production lines.
A study shows that 70 percent of workers in the US are disengaged, and this is costing the
companies
550 billion dollars a year every year.
So our effort should be to filter out as much unfairness as we can from everywhere, starting from our communities, starting from our
companies.
Someone thought that entering 'Enron' into the script would give it currency when discussing power
companies.
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